from Chinese language learning memo Chinese Grammar
Homework:
- Drill 2 until 5/17
- Review print 2 until Sunday
Chapter 3
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”$ X (specific) exists in Y = X在Y / Y有X”
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”$ X (non-specific) exists in Y = Y有X (❌ X在Y)”
- Counting things like “two pens” is also non-specific
- It seems that you can’t assign ambiguous things to the left side, like in an equation (blu3mo)
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”$ in here/there/where = X这儿zhèr,这里zhèli/那儿nàr,那里nàli/哪儿nǎr,哪里nǎli”
- 里 is a directional word
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”$ in S’s place = S X这儿zhèr,那儿nàr”
- Like “in my place,” “in your place,” etc.
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When combined,
- ”$ The book exists in my place = 书在我这儿”
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”$ What about …?, Where is …?, etc = 呢ne”
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”$ {S doing V} is X = V的S是X”
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Compound sentences
- Two dependent actions are combined directly
- When one action is done in order to do another
- ”$ S do V1 to V2 = S V1 V2”
- ”$ S go library to read book = S 去图书馆 看书”
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Position of time words
- ”$ today I do V = 今天我V / 我今天V”
Chapter 2
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Try writing in the textbook
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Interrogative sentences
- Interrogative words
- ”$ who = 谁shei2”
- ”$ what = 什么shen2me1”
- ”$ how much = 几jǐ”
- Like 几米jimi (m), asking with a unit
- Can be understood as “is” or “equals”
- By connecting the interrogative word with “is” like a variable, you can ask a question
- For example, for “Whose book is this?”, you can think of it as the equation “This = {Whose} book” and solve for {Whose}
- But, do not use 吗 in this case!
- Interrogative words
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Conjunctions
- ”$ and = 和hé”
- ”$ X, Y, and Z = X、Y和Z”
- Note: In Chinese, ”、” and ”,” are distinguished
- Only use ”、” when listing items in parallel, otherwise use ”,”
- ”$ and = 和hé”
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Numbers
- 2 has exceptions
- I remember something like that (blu3mo)(blu3mo)
- ”$ two (how many, for counting objects) = 两”
- (Also used for time, like 2 hours = 2 units of time)
- ”$ two (which number, for ordinal numbers) = 二”
- 2 has exceptions
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Time
- ”$ 15 minutes = 刻分kè fēn”
- ”$ 30 minutes = 半分bàn fēn”
- ”$ 45 minutes = 三刻分sān kè fēn”
- The format is “h:mm”
- ”$ 2:03; 两点零三(not 两点三)”
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Dates
- ”$ Jan 1st; 一月一号”
Chapter 1
- Chinese personal pronouns
- ”$ me: 我 wo3”
- ”$ we: 我们 wo3 men”
- ”$ we (including you): 咱们 zan2 men”
- Like “let us XX” (blu3mo)
- you: 你 ni3
- ”$ you (plural): 你们 ni3 men”
- ”$ you (polite): 您 nin2”
- However, it’s not necessarily rude to not use nin with important people (blu3mo)
- ”$ he/she/it: 他/她/它 ta1”
- ”$ they: 他们 ta2 men”
- ”$ me: 我 wo3”
- Demonstratives
- ”$ this: 这个 zhe4 ge / zhei4 ge”
- The latter pronunciation is more common (blu3mo)
- ”$ this is: 这 是 zhe4 shi4”
- (When 是 is used, 个 is omitted)
- ”$ that: 那个 na4 ge / nei4 ge”
- ”$ that is: 那 是 na4 shi4”
- (When 是 is used, 个 is omitted)
- ”$ that is: 那 是 na4 shi4”
- ”$ that?: 哪个 na3 ge”
- X是这 is like X equals this, X equals 这
- ”$ this: 这个 zhe4 ge / zhei4 ge”
Sentence patterns
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”$ S is C: S是C / S shi4 C”
- ”$ S is not C: S不是C / S bu2 shi4 C”
- ”$ S is also C: S也是C / S ye3 shi4 C”
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S V O: S V O
- I can write “I am surnamed X” as “我姓X”
- It’s not obvious that “姓” is a verb, not a noun (blu3mo)
- I can write “I am surnamed X” as “我姓X”
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”$ ~ ?: ~ 吗 (ma3)”
- Only for yes or no questions
- The response
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When you don’t know the location
- ”$ S’s C: S的C”
- my/his/her/our C: 我/他/她/我们 C
- When it’s “my family/affiliation,” omit 的! (blu3mo)
- my/his/her/our C: 我/他/她/我们 C
- Names
- For names with one character, make it two syllables by adding “小X”
- Make it two syllables for easier listening comprehension- The term “province people” is popular, similar to “Cantonese” and “Shanghainese”.
- For names with one character, make it two syllables by adding “小X”
- ”$ S’s C: S的C”
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Vocabulary
- 是 (shì): yes
- 不是 (bù shì): no
- 数 (shù): numbers
- 一 (yī), 二 (èr), 三 (sān), 四 (sì), 五 (wǔ), 六 (liù), 七 (qī), 八 (bā), 九 (jiǔ)
from Frog Life Basic Sentence Structure: Subject + Predicate
- Verb Predicate Sentence: Noun + Verb
- Adjective Predicate Sentence: Noun + Adjective
- Noun Predicate Sentence: Noun + Noun
- Subject-Predicate Sentence: Noun + (Subject + Predicate)
When calling someone:
- wo/ni/ta
- When it’s a group of mixed genders, the “ta” for “tamen” is different (not the female version).
Honorifics for names:
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Older: “lǎo” + name
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Younger: “xiǎo” + name
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Two-syllable names sound better than one-syllable names (?)
- For one-syllable names, “xiǎo” is added in front
- For small children, the first character of the name is repeated (like “Lanlan”)
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In social situations, use “先生” (for men), “女士” (for women), and “小姐” (for young women)
- If you know their title, use their last name + title (e.g., X + “lǎoshī”)
Nouns: General / Time / Place / Direction Verbs: Verbs that can take an object and those that cannot
- Whether a word representing the object comes after the verb or not (Example of coming after: “吃” + object to eat)
- Other examples of taking an object: “来” (lái), “去” (qù), etc.